When Her Implant Hit The Sangria, The Photographer Stopped Smiling-heuh

The wedding had been built to look gentle.

Soft flowers, pale linen, polished glasses, and the kind of carefully controlled beauty that made everyone lower their voices without knowing why.

It was my sister Sarah’s day, and every corner of the reception room had been arranged to prove that nothing in our family was difficult, damaged, or unresolved.

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The white roses sat in heavy glass bowls.

The chairs had ribbons tied neatly around their backs.

The drinks table gleamed beneath a row of pitchers, each one filled with fruit and deep red sangria.

I remember the smell of oranges and wine more clearly than almost anything else.

Smell is useful when sound cannot be trusted.

Seven years earlier, a severe illness had taken my hearing so completely that silence stopped feeling like peace and started feeling like exile.

People think deafness is the absence of noise.

For me, at first, it was the absence of warning.

No footsteps behind me.

No kettle clicking off.

No door opening.

No familiar voice from another room.

No one saying my name before their hand landed on my shoulder and made me jump.

The cochlear implant processor on my right ear did not give me the old world back perfectly.

It was not magic.

It did not turn a crowded wedding reception into clear conversation.

It did not make overlapping voices easy, or music pleasant, or laughter simple.

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